@@BW-kv9wj What one person may need to live off of may not be enough for another person. You normally want to obtain a good level of growth within Blue Chip companies or already have access to a large sum of money.
Yes, that is true. Which is why I usually say it's better just own both since they're pretty different, but great to hold together in a dividend portfolio. Just my opinion though!
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Retiree..JEPI, JEPQ in IRA. SCHD in after tax account.
@@sjvarney Huh interesting!
@@daviswatkinsyt Qualified Dividends tax free if you are in the 12% bracket. Higher but non qualified will more than cover RMDs.
Own JEPQ/JEPI. Use dividends to buy VOO and SCHD. Works for me. Haters do what you want.
I'm 50% SCHD, 25% JEPI, 25% JEPQ and retired in my mid 30s because of it.
Really? How much did you start with and how long investing into it?
@@BW-kv9wj What one person may need to live off of may not be enough for another person. You normally want to obtain a good level of growth within Blue Chip companies or already have access to a large sum of money.
@@BW-kv9wj Every time I try to answer you RUclips deletes my comment, it's like they won't allow people to give any financial advice.
I’m interested in the details as well!!
I was thinking of owning both as well.
if I am young, I would avoid these income / dividend ETFs.
I don't think it's valid to compare an equity ETF to an ETF that generates the majority of its income through options. Apples and rhubarbs.
Yes, that is true. Which is why I usually say it's better just own both since they're pretty different, but great to hold together in a dividend portfolio. Just my opinion though!
Haha
Both good